Note: I am not a Socialist. I only start this to start an interesting dialouge.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
...yet, people who are freaked out by such buzzwords hardly even know what socialism is.Ivellious wrote:Of course, I don't advocate for a total socialist government. It doesn't work. However, when conservatives use "socialism" these days, it's almost always just as a buzz word to freak people out and distract them from the real issues.
Well, we had a discussion about universal health care not long ago, and I see that it's obviously a current topic among Americans. Well, let me tell you - in my country we have universal health care and nobody complains about it or calls it socialist or unfair. In fact, I was surprised when I found out that there are countries that don't have it. I was like, "Wow, you get sick and you pay?!" This is obviously where the differences in mentality become apparent - maybe I was raised this way, but I see health care as a right. We all (the society) contribute (by taxes and employers paying fees) to have our health taken care of. You never know if or when you're going to get sick, and it's much easier to live when you know that you won't end up in the street if you need a surgery. I believe it's a sign of solidarity and progress to collectively secure our health.Ivellious wrote:For instance, I don't think universal health care is socialist in the least, but conservatives claim that it is and I think it's wrong.
When I was in Cuba I experienced this first hand. The stores catering to tourists were well stocked with all manner of merchandise, and Cubans were not allowed to enter. The stores for Cubans were bleak, with empty shelves and had a delapidated look. Of course, Cuba is an extreme example of Socialism. I liked Cuba because beer was $1 a bottle. A nice Catholic country.Reactionary wrote:This may cause an imbalance between supply and demand - you may have cheap clothes (a nearby fabric factory), while at the same time, people wait in queues for toilet paper or coffee.
Nothing wrong with this. Well managed Socialist countries (Norway, Sweden and others) also operate like this.Short1 wrote: What's wrong with a business providing goods and services and generating wealth that gets loaned out by banks so others can use it for their projects?
Well, it is official. France has elected a Socialist government headed by Francois Hollande. President Nicholas Sarkozy, a friend of Israel, will be replaced with a French version of Barak Obama.Furstentum Liechtenstein wrote: France seems poised to elect a Socialist government within a couple of weeks...
Here in the USA, that is not how it is set up here. We have about 53 percent, or there abouts, who pay no income tax at all. The rest pay the rest. It sounds like the tax rates in the countries I mentioned, everyone pays. That is a big difference. The USA Tax system is designed to secure a large voting block from those who don’t pay taxes under the disguise of social justice - and nothing else. Very bad tax system. So the socialism we see here in the USA is more neo-Marxist class warfare cr+p, just to keep one set people in power...Furstentum Liechtenstein wrote:Ivellious is right. Well-managed Socialism does have this going for it: the rich pay income tax according to their gains.
Warren Buffet would be happy.
FL
Everything's written here... in English:B. W. wrote:What percent of taxes do the other countries pay?